Toledo Free Press – August 12, 2012

Page 17

SENIORS

AUGUST 12, 2012 ■ VETERANS CONTINUED FROM A16 The VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, which covers the Toledo area, started looking for applicants in 2010. Noveskey is the first to try it out in this system. “It’s a nice way to get to know people,” Noveskey said. Noveskey started taking care of people in her home after her spouse, John, died about nine years ago. She cared for one woman for about four years so her house was mostly equipped with the necessary elements that the VA requires. To prepare her home for caregiving, Noveskey had to gut her bathroom, redo her ceilings, install special fire alarms and lighting and place a ramp between her family room and dining room. The cost came out of her own pockets. “My credit cards are all maxed out,” she said. But Noveskey is passionate for caregiving, she said. Plus, it’s not as though she does this for free. Veterans who enroll in the program directly pay their caregivers $1,500

to $3,000 a month, depending on their needs. The average cost for a semi-private room in a nursing home is about $6,235 per month. A home health aide costs about $21 per hour on average, according to www. longtermcare.gov. Like a home health aide situation, veterans in medical foster care homes receive visits from hospital staff. This is covered by typical VA benefits, said April Bartlett, the medical foster home coordinator for the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. A nurse and a physical therapist visit Sebring once a month, for example. “The program is meant to provide veterans with an alternate longterm care option in a safe and home-like environment and just to be able to offer vets the choice to remain living in a community, family home setting if they are faced with the need to move into a nursing home or a more institutionalized setting,” Bartlett said. “The tagline for the program is ‘Where heroes meet angels.’” Finding those “angels” is a rigorous process. Noveskey had to open her home

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for inspection by a social worker, a dietitian, registered nurse and physical therapist. She also had to undergo interviews and background checks. She and anyone else who lives in or moves into her house must be fingerprinted and pass health tests that check for tuberculosis. This also includes any help that she hires. It has been about two years since she began the application process and Sebring moved in during March. Noveskey is one of three approved Medical Foster Homes in the Ann Arbor system. Hosts in Camden, Mich., have been approved and are awaiting residents. Tami Brockway, a Toledo resident, has also been approved and is waiting for someone to move in. Brockway’s two sons grew up with two couples: Their own parents and an older married couple whom the Brockways have fostered. Applying for the VA program was a natural fit for a family of caregivers, she said. “I like the challenge; I love new people coming into my home and you just feel good about yourself that you’re

helping out someone who’s served our country,” Brockway said. “You don’t realize what they’ve been through unless you’ve been through it yourself, so it’ll be a new experience for me.” An added bonus is the fact that the VA allows its caregivers to take 30 days off each year, during which a VA professional steps in to take over, she said. The VA plans to expand the program to 102 sites in 46 states this year, Bartlett said. As Sebring continues to adjust to his new home, he said he couldn’t be any happier with the program. He had previously been living with his niece, but she had little time to stay home with him as it became more difficult to care for himself. Sebring, Noveskey and her dog Kasper have become quite the family. He shares with Noveskey his Vietnam War era memories from the months he spent on Navy ships and she makes sure he’s content and healthy. “She does everything. She gives me baths, fixes my lunches, gives me suppers,” Sebring said. “She does it all.” ✯

HOW CAN I CARE FOR HIM? WHO CAN I CALL FOR HELP? WHAT WILL IT COST? WHAT IF HE’S IN PAIN? HOW CAN I CARE OF HIM?

was I going to are of him? Wha AIN?HOW CAN I TAKE OF HIM? WHO going toCARE have toCAN I CALL FOR HELP? What was itIF HE’S going WHAT WILL IT COST? WHAT IN PAIN?HOW CAN I TAKE CARE HOW CAN I care for st? How would Ihim? e? How was I go F HIM? WHO CAN I CALL FOR HELP? WHAT WILL IT COST? WHAT IF take care of him tE’Swas I CAN going to HE’SOF IN PAIN? IN PAIN? HOW I TAKE CARE HIM? WHO CAN I CALL FOR What if to do? What was ng toWILLcost? How ELP? WHAT IT COST? WHAT IF HE’S IN PAIN? HOW CAN I TAKE IWHO manage? How CAN I call for help? CARE OF HIM? WHO CAN I CALL HELP? WHAT WILL IT COST? going to takeFORcar ? What was I go WHAT IF HE’S IN PAIN? HOW CAN I TAKE CARE OF HIM? WHO CAN have to do? Wha tCALLgoing to cost? WHAT cost? FOR HELP? WHATWILL WILL ITIT COST? WHAT IF HE’S IN PAIN?HOW would I manage? ANwas I TAKE CAREIOFgoing HIM? WHO CAN to I CALL FOR HELP? WHAT WILL IT are of him? Wha OST? WHAT IF HE’S IN PAIN? HOW CAN to I TAKE CARE OF HIM? WHO going to have What was it WILL going AN I CALL FOR HELP? WHAT IT COST?IHOW CAN I TAKE CARE st? How would e? How was I go WHO CAN I CALL FOR HELP? WHAT WILL IT COST? WHAT IF HE’S IN

“Once Hospice of Northwest Ohio stepped in, my worries were gone.”

“I constantly felt like I was in the hands of experts with Hospice of Northwest Ohio. I didn’t know if my husband needed a change of medicine or needed to sit up. I didn’t know all the things to make him comfortable, but they did.”

– Anita, wife of a Hospice of Northwest Ohio patient

We are the area’s largest and most experienced provider of

hospice care, a nonprofit organization solely dedicated to providing the best possible end-of-life experience for our patients and their families. Ask for us by name. The sooner you do, the more we can help.

© 2012 Hospice of Northwest Ohio

Answers for Living the Last Months of Life

Visit hospicenwo.org 419-661-4001 (Ohio) • 734-568-6801 (Michigan)

■ A17

Procedure treats clots in stroke patients By Brigitta Burks TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER bburks@toledofreepress.com

With the addition of new machinery and two doctors, Toledo-area stroke patients now have access to a less invasive procedure for treating blood clots in the brain. “Patients that qualify for this kind of treatment, they did not used to stay here. They’d have to be transferred to other care centers that can be as far as two hours away,” said Dr. Mouhammad Jumaa, who is responsible for the procedure at ProMedica Toledo Hospital and University of Toledo Medical Center, along with Dr. Syed Zaidi. The neurointerventionalists moved to the area in mid-July after practicing at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. They were welcomed at a reception and unveiling of a new suite at ProMedica Toledo Hospital on July 18. The procedure is similar to cardiac catheterization, Zaidi said. “[Patients] present to us with a ruptured aneurysm or an aneurysm, which has not yet ruptured, but needs treatment. This treatment, this endovascular treatment, provides them the opportunity to be treated in a minimally invasive fashion as opposed to open brain surgery. Typically, the way we treat these patients is go through their groin with a small catheter tube all the way to the arteries and the brain, wherever the disease is, and treat it,” he said. The biplanar thoracoscopy machinery is available at UTMC and Toledo Hospital. But, it’s not the only part of the procedure. “In addition to purchasing this very expensive machine, we actually had to assemble a team of very experienced nurses and technologists and physicians,” Jumaa said. Usually, the procedure is performed by the two doctors, two nurses, two technologists and an anesthesiologist team. It typically takes one to four hours. Jumaa said he expects the team to treat 100-150 patients per year. Depending on the condition of a patient, recovery time can be shorter than for open-brain surgery. However, the treatment is not necessarily meant to replace surgery. ■ STROKE CONTINUES ON A18


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